From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Torrance v. Torrance

Supreme Court of Ohio
Nov 27, 1946
70 N.E.2d 365 (Ohio 1946)

Opinion

No. 30607

Decided November 27, 1946.

Evidence — Court having ruled witness incompetent to testify — Proffer of testimony not necessary to challenge such ruling — Adverse party incompetent to testify against representative of party under disability — Representative party may not invoke statute to disqualify adverse party — Representative party not named in statute affording protection — Divorce — Action defended by trustee for suit — Section 11249, General Code — Plaintiff may testify in own behalf.

1. Where a court rules that a witness, through whom competent evidence might otherwise have been produced, is incompetent to testify, no proffer of testimony is necessary to challenge such ruling of the court.

2. Where a statute, making an adverse party incompetent to testify against the representative of a party under disability, names the representative entitled to its protection, a representative party not so named cannot invoke the statute to disqualify the adverse party from testifying in his own behalf.

3. A plaintiff in a divorce action may testify in his own behalf where the action is defended by a trustee for the suit appointed pursuant to Section 11249, General Code, requiring that, in the absence of a guardian or in case of his disability, the defense of an insane person be by a trustee for the suit appointed by the court in which the action is pending.

APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Summit county.

On May 19, 1944, the plaintiff, Philip M. Torrance, instituted this action for divorce from the defendant, Mary Ann Torrance, in the Common Pleas Court of Summit county on the ground of willful absence for more than three years. In an affidavit filed by plaintiff, the residence of the defendant was alleged to be in Urbana, Illinois, and service of summons was made on her by publication.

On June 23, 1944, a motion was filed suggesting that the defendant was an insane person and moving the court to appoint a trustee to appear, plead and defend for her. This motion was verified and stated that there was no guardian of her person or estate. On the same day, the Court of Common Pleas appointed a trustee for the suit in accordance with the prayer of the motion.

On the same day, the defendant, by her trustee, filed an answer admitting the marriage of plaintiff and defendant at Urbana, Illinois, in 1931, and the birth of a son to such marriage. The answer alleged that the defendant was, in 1938 and continuously since that date, an insane person and denied all the other allegations of the petition. On the same date, the defendant by her trustee filed a cross-petition, on which service was made, alleging the marriage of the parties, the birth of a son, that the plaintiff had been guilty of gross neglect of duty since January 1938, and that the plaintiff had failed to support the defendant, an insane person. The prayer of the cross-petition was for temporary and permanent alimony.

On application of the trustee for the defendant, the court ordered the plaintiff to pay certain obligations contracted by the defendant since June 1944, and to pay as temporary alimony 15 per cent after November 1944.

On the 27th day of February, 1945, the case came on for trial upon the petition, answer and cross-petition. After two witnesses had testified for the plaintiff concerning his character, the plaintiff was sworn as a witness in his own behalf but upon objection of the defendant the court held that he was incompetent to testify. Thereupon, over the objection of the defendant, the plaintiff proffered, in narrative form, his testimony which, in substance, was that about the year 19353 the defendant began to show signs of being mentally unbalanced; that in 1935 the plaintiff and defendant went to Europe where their child was born in 1936; that they returned to this country and lived in Akron until October 1937 when the defendant made a visit to her parents in Illinois; that upon her return the plaintiff filed a lunacy affidavit in the Probate Court of Summit county; that she was sent to Mercy Hospital in Canton and thereafter to the Massillon State Hospital; that later she went to the home of her parents in Urbana, Illinois; and that the plaintiff made several trips to see her during the time she was there and she appeared rational but indifferent toward him.

The plaintiff offered no evidence of his residence in the state of Ohio for one year or of residence in Summit county for 30 days immediately preceding the filing of the petition, and he did not make proffer of any evidence on either of these subjects.

The case was then heard upon the cross-petition, and evidence was offered in the form of exhibits showing the mental record and hospitalization of the defendant and that she had a classification of dementia praecox with unfavorable prognosis.

On March 2, 1945, the Common Pleas Court dismissed the petition, awarded alimony on the defendant's cross-petition, and overruled plaintiff's motion for new trial.

The plaintiff then appealed to the Court of Appeals for Summit county and that court reversed the judgment and remanded the case to the Common Pleas Court for further proceedings according to law, for the reason that the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of the plaintiff.

Thereafter, the defendant's motion to certify the record to this court was allowed, as a consequence of which the case is now here for review.

Messrs. Buckingham, Doolittle Burroughs, for appellee.

Messrs. Wise, Roetzel, Maxon, Kelly Andress and Mr. John M. Ulman, for appellant.


The defendant makes incidental claims that the plaintiff was not entitled to a reversal of the judgment of the trial court by the Court of Appeals on the grounds that he did not make any offer to prove an essential issue in his action for divorce, namely, that he was and had been for at least 30 days a bona fide resident of Summit county and had been a resident of the state for at least one year before filing his petition; that tie did not proffer any evidence sufficient to sustain any statutory ground for divorce; and that he did not offer or proffer any evidence to rebut the case made by the defendant upon her cross-petition for alimony.

A sufficient answer to these claims is that, since the denial of the right of the plaintiff to testify was based upon the court's view that plaintiff was an incompetent witness and not upon the ground that the testimony which he might have given, had he been permitted to testify, was incompetent, no proffer was necessary. Where a court rules that a witness through whom competent evidence might otherwise have been produced is incompetent to testify, no proffer of testimony is necessary to challenge the ruling of the court. 64 Corpus Juris, 123, Section 141; Old Silver Beach Corp. v. Inhabitants of Falmouth, 266 Mass. 224, 165 N.E. 1; Grieve v. Howard, 54 Utah 225, 180 P. 423; Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Oliver, 95 Va. 445, 28 S.E. 594; Muskeget Island Club v. Inhabitants of Nantucket, 185 Mass. 303, 70 N.E. 61. The rejection of a competent witness will be held prejudicial although the facts he was expected to testify to are not shown. Wolf v. Powner, Exr., 30 Ohio St. 472.

If the plaintiff was a competent witness but was erroneously denied the right to testify, the defendant cannot successfully claim a failure on the part of the plaintiff to make out a case on his petition or a defense to the cross-petition of the defendant.

The principal question, therefore, to be determined in this case is whether a plaintiff in a divorce action may testify in his own behalf where the action is defended by a trustee for the suit appointed pursuant to Section 11249, General Code, requiring that, in the absence of a guardian or in case of his disability, the defense of an insane person be by a trustee for the suit appointed by the court in which the action is pending.

Formerly, husband and wife were not competent to testify in civil actions for or against each other, but Section 11493, General Code (formerly Section 310 of the Civil Code, adopted in 1853, 51 Ohio Laws, 108), provides:

"All persons are competent witnesses except those of unsound mind, and children under 10 years of age who appear incapable of receiving just impressions of the facts and transactions respecting which they are examined, or of relating them truly."

Within Part Third, Title IV, Division VII, Chapter 3 of the General Code, entitled "Divorce and Alimony," is found Section 11988, General Code (formerly Section 5697, Revised Statutes, 88 Ohio Laws, 531), which provides that: "* * * The parties, notwithstanding their marital relation, shall be Competent to testify in actions and proceedings under this chapter to the same extent that any other witness might."

But the defendant claims that the plaintiff is rendered an incompetent witness in the instant case by force of Section 11495, General Code, which, so far as applicable to this case, is as follows:

"A party shall not testify when the adverse party is the guardian or trustee of either a deaf and dumb or an insane person, * * * except:

"1. The facts which occurred after the appointment; of the guardian or trustee of an insane person * * *."

It becomes necessary to determine whether the section of the Code last quoted applies to the trustee for the suit appointed by the trial court in the instant case. In discussing the matter of competency of witnesses to testify under Section 5242, Revised Statutes, now Section 11495, General Code, Judge Dickman, in his opinion in the case of Roberts v. Briscoe, 44 Ohio St. 596, 600, 10 N.E. 61, said:

"When we consider the enlightened progress made through the Code in relaxing the rigid rules as to the competency of witnesses, we can not but be impressed with its liberal spirit, and inclined, in order that justice may not fail, to apply to it such canons of interpretation as will, when not plainly violating the legislative intent, favor the admission rather than the exclusion of testimony."

Again, Judge Robinson in the course of his opinion in the case of Stream v. Barnard, Exrx., 120 Ohio St. 206, 211, 165 N.E. 727, 64 A. L. R., 1144, said:

"The object of Section 11495 is to limit the right conferred by Section 11493 in its application to parties adverse to executors and persons suing or defending in a similar representative capacity. It is an exception to Section 11493, and, insofar as it is an exception to the general rule so enacted in Section 11493, it will be strictly construed; that is, it will not be construed to limit the right conferred by Section 11493 to any greater extent than is therein plainly expressed, and inferences will not be indulged."

More recently, Judge Turner, in his opinion in the case of Goehring v. Dillard, a Minor, 145 Ohio St. 41, at page 49, 60 N.E.2d 704, 158 A. L. R., 299, cited and quoted with approval the above-quoted statements of Judges Dickman and Robinson.

Aid in the solution of the problem at hand will be given by an examination of the legal character and status of the trustee appointed in the instant case. It is well settled that, under Section 11495, General Code, and similar statutes, a party to a suit is incompetent to testify when the adverse party is a guardian of the person or guardian or trustee of the estate of an insane person or an imbecile, except as to facts that transpired after the appointment of such guardian or trustee. McNicol v. Johnson. Gdn., 29 Ohio St. 85; Baker v. Jerome, 50 Ohio St. 682, 689, 35 N.E. 1113; Ross v. Todd, Gdn., 4 C. C., 1, 2 C. D., 385; Nolan v. Harberer, 3 Ohio App. 45.

The Probate Court, by virtue of Section 10501-53, General Code, has exclusive jurisdiction, unless otherwise provided by law, to appoint and remove, on proper notice and hearing, guardians of insane persons and testamentary trustees who may also be trustees of insane persons. Furthermore, Section 10507-46 et seq., General Code, provides that when a lunatic or imbecile who resides outside of the state has rights, credits or monies in this state, the Probate Court of the county in which such property is situated, if it considers it necessary, may appoint a resident guardian of such person to manage and take care of his property. Such fiduciary is required to give bond and is subject to the direction and orders of the court as to the management of and the accounting for his trust.

Section 11249, General Code, provides that:

"The defense of an insane person must be by his legally appointed guardian, except that if there is no guardian, or he has an adverse interest, by a trustee for the suit, appointed by the court. * * *" (Italics ours.)

Such appointee has no statutory authority to institute an action for an insane person. It may even be seriously questioned whether the defendant, if an insane person, can prosecute her cross-action in this case either in person or through a trustee for the suit appointed by the trial court, because Section 11247, General Code, provides that "the action of an insane person must be brought by his guardian." But this question has not been raised, is not now before the court, and is not decided.

At any rate, it is clear that the "trustee" is appointed only "for the suit." There is no provision that he shall give bond. Section 11250, General Code, places him in the same category as a "guardian ad litem" so far as the execution of his duties is concerned. It provides: "The court shall require a guardian ad litem, or a trustee appointed under the next preceding section, faithfully to discharge his duty, and upon his failure so to do, may remove him, and appoint another in his stead. The court may fix a compensation for his services, which shall be taxed in the costs against the minor or insane person."

It is clear that the trustee so appointed is not a fiduciary and not a real party to the suit, but that the person is the real party against whom a judgment for costs may be rendered. The trustee stands in the position of a mere guardian ad litem and is not an adverse party in the suit. 22 Ohio Jurisprudence, 89, Section 44. Similarly, it has been held that where an infant brings an action by next friend, the infant and not the next friend is the real party in interest. Burkham v. Cooper, 2 C. C., 77, 1 C. D., 371; Ransom, an Infant, v. Haberer Co., 13 C. C. (N.S.), 511, 22 C. D., 592, affirmed without opinion, 85 Ohio St. 483, 98 N.E. 1131.

Finally, Section 11495, General Code, by its express terms, applies only when a guardian or trustee of an insane person is an adverse party in the litigation. Where a statute, making an adverse party incompetent to testify against the representative of a party under disability, names the representative entitled to its protection, a representative party not so named — in the instant case a trustee for the suit — cannot invoke the statute to disqualify the adverse party from testifying in his own behalf. Bomberger v. Turner, Admr., 13 Ohio St. 263, 269, 82 Am. Dec., 438; 28 R. C. L., 495, Section 82; L.R.A. 1916D, 815, note; Savage v. Modern Woodmen of America, 84 Kan. 63, 113 P. 802, 33 L.R.A. (N.S.), 773.

Since the trustee in the instant case was not an adverse party or the real party in interest, and was not named as within the provisions of Section 11495, General Code, that section has, no application to deny the right of the plaintiff to testify. 70 Corpus Juris, 294, Section 387. To give the statute such construction and effect and thereby permit a litigant to invoke it by merely moving the court to appoint ex parte and without notice a trustee to defend his suit and thereby close the lips of the opposing litigant opens the door for possible collusion and fraud. The defendant has a complete remedy under the statute by the appointment of a guardian for her if that action is warranted by the facts as to her insanity.

We hold that the statute does not make the plaintiff an incompetent witness.

The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

WEYGANDT, C.J., ZIMMERMAN, TURNER and MATTHIAS, JJ., concur.

BELL and WILLIAMS, JJ., dissent.


Summaries of

Torrance v. Torrance

Supreme Court of Ohio
Nov 27, 1946
70 N.E.2d 365 (Ohio 1946)
Case details for

Torrance v. Torrance

Case Details

Full title:TORRANCE, APPELLEE v. TORRANCE, APPELLANT

Court:Supreme Court of Ohio

Date published: Nov 27, 1946

Citations

70 N.E.2d 365 (Ohio 1946)
70 N.E.2d 365

Citing Cases

In re Story

In re Frye, supra. See Bomberger v. Turner, Admr., 13 Ohio St. 263, 269, 82 Am. Dec., 438; In re Raab's…

Vincenzo v. Newhart

Defendant asserts that, since no proffer was made of the testimony to be produced by the attending physician,…